Tuesday, July 9th 2013
MacBook Pro Retina with Haswell-GT3 Silicon Confirmed
Apple's MacBook Air refresh for 2013 saw it integrating Intel's 4th generation Core "Haswell" CPUs in an effort to improve performance and battery life. It was only a matter of time before the CPU architecture caught up with the rest of Apple's lineup. A validation of a 15-inch MacBook Pro on Geekbench database reveals that Apple is already testing the notebook with the very latest Intel chips.
With Core "Haswell," Intel introduced a new grade of silicon codenamed "Haswell-GT3," which combines four CPU cores with up to 6 MB L3 cache, and a large integrated graphics core that features 40 execution units, as opposed to 20 found on regular "Haswell-GT2" and "Haswell-GT1" grades. The added pixel-crunching muscle makes the chip ready to singlehandedly take on Apple's Retina displays, without the need for discrete GPUs, such as the NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M that handled the first Retina-equipped MacBook Pro.The Geekbench validation scored by the press points out that a near-future 15-inch MacBook Pro could run Intel's Core i7-4950HQ quad-core processor, which is a "Haswell-GT3" part, featuring Intel Iris 5200 graphics, 6 MB L3 cache, and up to 2.40 GHz of CPU clock speed. A slightly older report that predates Apple's grand Spring unveil, pointed out that "Haswell" driven MacBook Pros with Retina display, could be introduced any time this summer. Apple is eyeing back-to-school sales.
Source:
MacRumors
With Core "Haswell," Intel introduced a new grade of silicon codenamed "Haswell-GT3," which combines four CPU cores with up to 6 MB L3 cache, and a large integrated graphics core that features 40 execution units, as opposed to 20 found on regular "Haswell-GT2" and "Haswell-GT1" grades. The added pixel-crunching muscle makes the chip ready to singlehandedly take on Apple's Retina displays, without the need for discrete GPUs, such as the NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M that handled the first Retina-equipped MacBook Pro.The Geekbench validation scored by the press points out that a near-future 15-inch MacBook Pro could run Intel's Core i7-4950HQ quad-core processor, which is a "Haswell-GT3" part, featuring Intel Iris 5200 graphics, 6 MB L3 cache, and up to 2.40 GHz of CPU clock speed. A slightly older report that predates Apple's grand Spring unveil, pointed out that "Haswell" driven MacBook Pros with Retina display, could be introduced any time this summer. Apple is eyeing back-to-school sales.
16 Comments on MacBook Pro Retina with Haswell-GT3 Silicon Confirmed
I think the current MacBook Pro is already thin enough. For once Apple could keep the thickness and increase the performance instead of keeping the performance and making the product even thinner, though I already can guess which route Apple will choose.
Actually the graphics in the retina are a 650m GDDR5 clocked higher than a gtx 660m
no, that is gt3e. gt3 is being used in the dual core i5 4258 and 4288u processors.
GT3e includes the 128MB L4 cache whereas GT3 does not. GT3e is only available with quad cores, but GT3 is available on both dual and quad cores. The "e" has nothing to do with the number of CPU cores. The original article is correct.
Pls stop posting those urban legends misinformation. Anything not native on LCD, looks blurry and washed out.
If 4 pixels display one pixel, it looks identical, it's only when displays do silly scaling and interpolation that this breaks down, the rendering the the retina display screen is different
sorry I simply assumed the retina display would work as a normal display does, where it appears it does all sorts of aliasing and pixel doubling, instead of running a true 2880x1800 res :o
The thing is I have tried this with one of my friends on a 4K TV vs a HD TV. Both the same size, but when we switched the 4K TV to a HD channel the image was way worst than the native HD next to it. Actually it almost looked like an upscaled standard TV signal. And to test even more, the store clerk put a demo game on both on the same time on 1080p and there I have the confirmation that having 1080p displayed on a 4K monitor looks more more worst than if having it at native 1080p.
Surprisingly the 4K monitor was looking better, actually extremely good, only on static pictures (very sharp clarity) and 4K movies. Anything lower than that the 1080p monitor next to it was 2x time more better.
Look at PSP on Vita for example, since (assuming filtering is set to off) it just sends off double vertical and horizontal pixels it actually works there
Anyways im getting an older retina tomorrow due to this news so I will test and let yall know.
I'm sorry to say this, but washed out and blurry image suggests, that you are doing something wrong, most likely using an incorrect resolution. PEBKAC